David Nečas writes: > On Sun, Feb 25, 2007 at 03:58:57AM +0000, Kumar Appaiah wrote: > > I am trying to display a UTF-8 file in a very simple GTK+ application using > > a > > text view > > ... > > actualText = g_convert((const gchar *)buf, (gssize) n, > > "UTF-8", > > "ISO8859-1", > > &n_read, > > &n_written, > > NULL); > > If the file is already in UTF-8, why you convert it from ISO > Latin1 to UTF-8? And if it isn't in UTF-8, why you call it > `UTF-8 file'? This does not make sense.
I have commented that line out now, but still no use. > > gtk_text_buffer_set_text(GTK_TEXT_BUFFER(textBuffer), > > actualText, n); > > n is not the length of the converted text in bytes (unless > it's pure ASCII), it's the length of the text *before* > conversion. So in addition to being possibly misconverted > the text is truncated too. In that case, I then set n to strlen(actualText), which should give me the right value, as strlen checks for '\0'. But now, I get this: (llf_utf:21130): Gtk-CRITICAL **: gtk_text_buffer_emit_insert: assertion `g_utf8_validate (text, len, NULL)' failed Thanks. Kumar _______________________________________________ gtk-list mailing list [email protected] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gtk-list
